Precious metals jump as dollar weakens after U.S. data | Reuters

LONDON Gold rose 2 percent, silver hit a 10-month high and platinum climbed to its highest in six months on Tuesday, as the dollar weakened after U.S. data came in below forecast.

U.S. housing starts fell more than expected in March and permits for future home construction hit a one-year low, suggesting some cooling in the housing market in line with signs of a sharp slowdown in economic growth in the first quarter.

Gold touched a one-week high of $1,256.80 an ounce and was up 1.7 percent at $1,252.26 by 1433 GMT, while platinum rose 3.4 percent to its highest since Oct. 23 at $1,013.71.

Silver climbed 5.2 percent to $17.07, its highest since June 2015, before stabilising with a 4.2 percent gain at $16.90.

"Precious (metals) have performed amazingly well in the first quarter, silver is probably playing some catch up with gold now ... the weaker dollar is helping this afternoon," Societe Generale analyst Robin Bhar said.

"As the year goes on, a lot depends on the Fed ... we may not have any hike before the end of the year and that should provide support for gold."

The dollar extended losses after the U.S. data, falling 0.5 percent against a basket of major currencies.

Global equities climbed on Tuesday, but that did not dampen demand for gold, often seen as a hedge against risk.

Gold traders were also watching for comments from Federal Reserve officials to gauge the outlook for U.S. monetary policy.

"Gold should probably hang on to its gains in the second quarter because the dollar is likely to stay relatively subdued with the expectations of U.S. interest rate hikes being pushed out to the second half of this year," Mitsubishi Corp analyst Jonathan Butler said.

The Fed raised rates modestly from near zero in December -- its first policy tightening in nearly a decade. While futures markets imply no further increases until December, Fed projections suggest there could be two more hikes by year-end.

New York Fed President William Dudley said U.S. economic conditions were "mostly favourable" but the Fed remained cautious on interest rates.

Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren, however, said the Fed was set to increase rates more rapidly than investors currently expected.

Top gold consumer China launched a yuan-denominated gold benchmark on Tuesday as the country took an ambitious step to exert more control over the pricing of the metal and boost its influence in the global bullion market.

Palladium gained 2.9 percent to $583.84 an ounce.

(Additional reporting by A. Ananthalakshmi in Singapore; Editing by David Goodman and David Evans)

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